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Climate Resilient Cities Reducing Vulnerabilities to Climate Change Impacts and Strengthening Disaster Risk Management

Climate Resilient Cities Reducing Vulnerabilities to Climate Change Impacts and Strengthening Disaster Risk Management in East Asia’s Cities. July 14, 2008, Pattaya Thailand Neeraj Prasad, Federica Ranghieri, Ravi Sinha, and Earl Kessler. Overview of presentation.

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Climate Resilient Cities Reducing Vulnerabilities to Climate Change Impacts and Strengthening Disaster Risk Management

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  1. Climate Resilient CitiesReducing Vulnerabilities to Climate Change Impacts and StrengtheningDisaster Risk Management in East Asia’s Cities July 14, 2008, Pattaya Thailand Neeraj Prasad, Federica Ranghieri, Ravi Sinha, and Earl Kessler

  2. Overview of presentation • Background and project inception • The “Primer” – What is it? Why have one? • Climate change and disasters in EA cities • Objectives and organization of the Primer • Hot spots and identifing priorities • Creating a city information base • City case studies and key lessons learned • Conclusions and Q&A

  3. Background • Where did the demand for the project come from? • How did the project take shape and how was the team selected? • What methodology was adopted and how was this implemented?

  4. What is the Primer? • The Primer outlines city typologies • It integrates climate change with DRM • It presents a “hot spot” tool for identifying city-specific priorities for action • It identifies both adaptation and mitigation strategies at the local level, based on learning from regional and global sound practices • The Primer is applicable to a range of cities - from those starting to build awareness on climate change to those with climate change strategies and institutions already in place

  5. Why do we need a Primer? • Climate change and its impacts are real • Climate change impacts are felt at local level • Climate change impacts and broader natural disasters can undermine sustainable development, growth, and poverty reduction • Cities should be aware of risks to determine strategies to anticipate impacts • Cities can adopt alternative, “cleaner” development paths to reduce future impacts

  6. Why East Asia specifically? • East Asia is urbanizing rapidly: 2 million new residents every month • Climate change induced disasters in East Asia cities affect their economic growth and poverty reduction efforts • East Asia cities are already vulnerable to multiple natural hazards – even without climate change impacts • The need for a new way to develop and manage cities

  7. Asia’s mega cities

  8. Urban growth needs to be climate-proofed Source: Angel et al., 2005 If average densities continue to decrease, doubling of the developing world's urban population by 2030 will result in a tripling of their built-up areas.

  9. East Asia is at high risk for climate change impacts Source: SEDAC, Columbia Univ., 2007

  10. East Asia is at high risk for natural disasters

  11. Major population centers are severely impacted Source: SEDAC, Columbia Univ., 2007

  12. The Primer: Understanding how to reduce vulnerabilities

  13. Objectives of the Primer • To understand the issues and impact of climate change at the city level • To engage in a participatory approach to establish vulnerabilities to potential climate change impacts • To learn about the why and the how through illustrative examples from other cities • To build resilience to future disasters into planning and design through no-regrets endeavors • To understand the requirements for moving from theory to practice • To engage in partnerships and shared learning with other cities facing similar problems

  14. Organization of the Primer • Section 1 - Understanding the Impacts of Climate Change and Disaster Risk Management • Section 2 - Explaining Climate Change Impacts and Disaster Risk Management • Section 3 - Assessment Exercise in the Determination of a HOT SPOT • Section 4 - Creating a City Information Base • Section 5 - Sound Practice Examples of Adaptation and Mitigation • Section 6 – Conclusions • Additional resources available

  15. An integrated disaster management system

  16. Climate Change and DRM

  17. The “Hot Spot” exercise • “Given” • Geographic location • City size and growth rate • Governance structure • Disaster history • “Influentiable” • City management • Financial resources • Built environment • Disaster response systems • Economic impact of disasters

  18. City description and size

  19. Cities have a choice as to their physical footprints

  20. Governance, management, and financial resources

  21. Built Environment

  22. Urban poor and marginalized at greatest risk and suffer most

  23. Political and economic impacts

  24. Hazards and disaster response

  25. Early warning systems and effective response capabilities to limit damage

  26. Climate change impacts

  27. Building a city information base

  28. Building resilient cities: Learning from experience

  29. Case Studies Overview

  30. City Profiles of Sound Practices (on CD) Detailed Profiles Short Profiles WHY? HOW? POLICY DETAILS IMPLEMENTATION DETAILS COORDINATION What to extract from the profiles

  31. Sound Practices and Lessons • Organizational structure & information-base • Institutional mechanism • Ownership by line departments • Climate change strategy • Public awareness • Accounting and reporting of GHG inventory • Hazard risk financing • DRM system considering CC impacts

  32. Sound Practices and Lessons • Mitigation: Energy sector • Mitigation: Transport sector • Mitigation: Built environment & density • Mitigation: Forestry and urban greenery • Mitigation: Financial mechanisms • Adaptation: Infrastructure • Adaptation: Water conservation • Adaptation: Public health

  33. Conclusions & next steps • Key take-aways from today • ? • ? • ? • Post-Pattaya • Synergies with ECO2 (more later) • Downscaling for specific clients • Investment infrastructure • Climate change strategies/ frameworks - TA • Questions? (clarification only – open discussion later in the day)

  34. Investing in the future

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